Task Force Will Focus on
Cutting Red Tape to Support Businesses in Every Neighborhood;

New Reforms Proposed to
Streamline Process for Signs in Public Ways

Mayor Rahm Emanuel today launched the Chicago Task Force on
Removing Barriers to Employment and Entrepreneurship, which will provide the
City Council with recommendations for cutting red tape that too often gets in
the way of job and business opportunities.

“The foundation for a stronger future starts with clearing a path
for Chicagoans to succeed today,” said Mayor Emanuel. “This task force is
another way we are making City Hall a partner and no longer a problem to the
residents and businesses of the City of Chicago. From gaining employment to
starting and maintaining a business, this latest step is to ensure every
Chicagoan can thrive.”

The task force will focus on three key priorities. First, it will
analyze the process for starting a business and applying for a City job,
working to identify any roadblocks to opportunity in the application process.
This review will include an assessment of the value of fingerprint background
checks as a security measure as compared to its impact on job opportunities.
Second, it will review the inspection and permitting process to identify
opportunities to streamline the experience for individuals and businesses that
interact with the City. Lastly, the task force will analyze existing business
licenses and develop recommendations for improving the ease of doing business
in Chicago.

The Task Force will by co-chaired by Deputy Mayor and Chief
Neighborhood Development Officer Andrea Zopp and Department of Business Affairs
and Consumer Protection (BACP) Commissioner Maria Guerra Lapacek. Its members
will include Alds. Anthony Beale (9th), Emma Mitts (37th) and Patrick O’Connor
(40th).

“This task force represents another prime example of how the City
Council and Mayor Emanuel are working together to build a more welcoming
environment, and to cut red tape for neighborhood businesses, both in the 37th
Ward, which I represent and throughout Chicago,” said Ald. Mitts, who serves as
Chairman of the City Council’s Licensing Committee.

“By cutting red tape in Chicago we can help our neighborhood
businesses focus growing their businesses and creating jobs instead of dealing
with any unnecessary and burdensome regulations,” said Ald. O’Connor.

Mayor Emanuel today also announced new reforms that will
streamline the process to issue public way use sign permits in Chicago. The
reforms will cut the number of days to issue these permits by up to 80 percent
and were developed in partnership with Alds. Mitts and Beale, the Chicago Small
Business Advocacy Council and a coalition of business groups.

The City processes more than 5,500 public way use permits
annually. The permits, which include signs on neighborhood businesses that face
a public street, require full City Council approval. The current process to
achieve council approval often takes up to 90 days before a sign permit can be
issued. The reforms will cut up to 75 days from the council process by removing
the requirement that public way use permit ordinances be published prior to
issuance (30 days) and by establishing a process to accept direct introductions
of public way use sign permit ordinances to the Committee on Transportation and
Public Way (30-45 days).

“Time is money and I don’t want the process to be in the pockets
of our small business owners,” said Ald. Beale, who serves as Chairman of the
Committee on Transportation and Public Way. “This ordinance will support
businesses in the ninth ward and throughout Chicago.”

In addition to reducing the number of days for business owners to
obtain their public way sign permit, there are also about 130 other public way
uses including canopies, benches and awnings that will have the publication
step eliminated in the application process.

“Small businesses drive the Chicago economy and support local
communities throughout the city,” said SBAC CEO Elliot Richardson. “We
appreciate the work done by the Mayor’s team to enact these reforms and the
tremendous support of a dedicated coalition made up of local chambers of
commerce and trade organizations who worked with us on this issue,” Richardson
added.

The sign reforms and task force build on the Emanuel
administration’s record of improving and streamlining City services. In his
first year in office, Mayor Emanuel eliminated the job-killing employee head
tax and reduced the number of business license types by 60 percent. Earlier
this month, Mayor Emanuel launched an online business license application
system to allow Chicago’s business owners to apply electronically for required
City licenses. The paperless process allows businesses to submit applications
and any required documents, as well as pay for any license application fees,
through the web.

The Chicago Task Force on Removing Barriers to Employment and
Entrepreneurship members are: